American shale gas project is a bubble about to burst – Gazprom CEO

The extraction of shale gas in the US is unprofitable and this “soap bubble will burst soon,” believes the CEO of Russian gas giant Gazprom Aleksey Miller.

“Currently, there aren’t any projects that we know of where
shale gas production would be profitable,” Miller stated,
adding that “absolutely all the boreholes” are in the
red.

There is an opinion that the whole thing is just a “soap
bubble,” Gazprom head pointed out in an interview with Rossiya 24
TV channel.

The US “is not a competitor” for the Russian energy
giant, Miller stated.

“We are skeptical about shale gas,” he said, as cited by
Interfax. Therefore, Gazprom sees “no risks” for itself in
the development of shale gas energy in the US. America still
remains a country with a deficit of gas – it is the largest gas
market and the largest consumer of this fuel, Miller said.

According to experts, the increase in volume of shale gas
production corresponds with the dip in natural gas extraction on US
territory, Gazprom CEO noted.

Apparently, one of the reasons behind the development of shale
gas production in the US is to ensure the country’s “energy
security,” Miller suggested. He added that Russia has
exactly the same technologies. For instance, it extracts gas out of
coal in Kuznetsk Basin in southwestern Siberia.

Earlier this month, the head of another Russian energy giant –
Lukoil – also expressed some skepticism over the excitement around
“shale gas revolution.”

“Of course, it is a great achievement on the part of US
engineers that America is now producing oil and gas from shale. In
order to do it, they had to drill very tricky wells and do
hydraulic fracturing,” Lukoil President, Vagit Alekperov told
RT. That way the US managed “to cut the cost of
producing this gas and liquid hydrocarbons from these
layers.”

“Undoubtedly, this is an achievement, but I wouldn’t call it
a revolution,” the head of the oil company stated.

Shale gas is an unconventional sources of natural gas, stored in
fine-grained organic-rich rocks. Different types of
sedimentary rock contain natural gas deposits – such as sandstones,
limestones or shales. Compared to conventional gas sources,
shale reservoirs are more difficult to produce from because often
the gas is trapped within thick, horizontal rock layers, in
relatively low concentrations.

The production of shale gas in the US began at the beginning of
this century and has increased rapidly since. In 2010,
shale gas represented more than 20% of the country’s gas
production, according to the International Energy Agency(IEA). The
development of shale gas production was prompted by soaring gas
prices in the early 2000s as well as by technological advances –
particularly concerning hydraulic fracturing.

The agency estimates that by 2035 around 40% of the world’s gas
might be unconventional, and shale gas will by far be the greatest
part of it.